Ralif Redhammer
Legend
Systemic bias is a heck of thing.
Having run open tables, yeah, the vast majority of people that show up don't really consider the behind-the-scenes people or deep history of gaming anymore than someone would consider the history or maker of Monopoly. I totally love gaming history, both within the games and of the games, but there's something kinda freeing about knowing that the younger generations are not beholden to it, are free to bring their own new stories to life. To make their own histories.
My FLGS has had a copy of Cyborg Commando sitting on the shelves for months now. I did pick up Lejendary Adventures and quite liked that, though I think it's hindered in places by trying to be deliberately anti-D&D, making for some odd mechanics.
Trying to imagine what Middle-Earth as a D&D setting in the 90s would've been like just boggles the mind. Would they have removed the classes and races that didn't fit, or shoehorned them into the world? About all I can say for sure would be that Aragorn would've 100% had a ponytail.
Until the internet really came to prominence in the form we know now, gaming history existed in fragments and rumors. Dr. Fine's Shared Fantasy would've probably been the earliest study, but I wouldn't have even known to look that one up.
This to me is the most glaring double standard. Lorraine was 'rude to gamers", while Gary could write off half of the population as being unable to appreciate the game because of (completely false) biological reasons. A lot of women are gamers, who do you think alienated more gamers?
Having run open tables, yeah, the vast majority of people that show up don't really consider the behind-the-scenes people or deep history of gaming anymore than someone would consider the history or maker of Monopoly. I totally love gaming history, both within the games and of the games, but there's something kinda freeing about knowing that the younger generations are not beholden to it, are free to bring their own new stories to life. To make their own histories.
I don't think it is heresy. I'm not convinced the vast majority of people who play D&D even today actually care too much about how the sausage is made or who is doing the cooking. I'm willing to wager the majority of the controversies surrounding names like Orion Black and Zak S. pretty much went unnoticed by the vast majority of D&D enthusiast. Back in the late 80s and early 90s the only people I associated with gaming were Gary Gygax, Kevin Siembieda, Mike Pondsmith, and Steve Jackson (that's Steve Jackson of Steve Jackson Games not Games Workshop for our British viewers).
My FLGS has had a copy of Cyborg Commando sitting on the shelves for months now. I did pick up Lejendary Adventures and quite liked that, though I think it's hindered in places by trying to be deliberately anti-D&D, making for some odd mechanics.
Admittedly, I might have picked up a game based on Gygax's name. But that game would have been Cyborg Commando putting to rest my desire to pick up any other game related to Gygax.
Trying to imagine what Middle-Earth as a D&D setting in the 90s would've been like just boggles the mind. Would they have removed the classes and races that didn't fit, or shoehorned them into the world? About all I can say for sure would be that Aragorn would've 100% had a ponytail.
I guarantee you that Gandalf would have been higher than level 5![]()
Until the internet really came to prominence in the form we know now, gaming history existed in fragments and rumors. Dr. Fine's Shared Fantasy would've probably been the earliest study, but I wouldn't have even known to look that one up.
Yeah, I was in much the same boat. Until the arrival of the internet, the names Gygax, et al. mean nothing to me except as far as listing in the credits section. I had no idea who these people were, what TSR was like or who was running it. The names only concerned me in as far as I'd look for products of the authors of other products I liked. Hell, I didn't even know that TSR had crashed and burned and was bought up by WotC until a website by some cat named Eric Noah started posting teasers about 3e.